Conspiracy theories have become a kind bugbear for a hysterical establishment bent on controlling the public discourse. While some conspiracy theories are clearly absurd—and a bit of fun—others are serious working hypotheses attempting to make sense of an often baffling world. The attempt to dismiss them and ban them on social media reflects a nascent tyrannical tendency in our ruling elites. Film maker and Affirmative Right contributor Richard Wolstencroft stands on the grassy knoll and asks why people get so upset about a bit of informed or uninformed conjecture.

Paul Weston on the disgraceful behaviour of the Greater Manchester Police, who escorted a group of Muslims into a White working class area to disrupt Tommy Robinson's campaign for this Thursday's European Parliamentary election. The police stood idly by while illegally masked thugs threw stones at innocent women and children, revealing the fact that Whites, especially working class Whites, are treated like second class citizens in their own country.

Colin Liddell and Andy Nowicki return with another Affirmative Right Podcast to discuss two "historical memes" pushed by the Alt-Right to evoke sympathy and support for Naziism, namely the firebombing of Dresden in 1945 and the Morgenthau Plan to divide Germany into several smaller states after the war.

But was the bombing of Dresden any worse than many of the other atrocities of WWII, and how about the Morgenthau Plan? Was that really any different from what the Confederacy was trying to pull off in 1860s America? Also, what effect did WWII have on the rising tide of degeneracy in the West today?

With only a few days to go until the Australian federal election, filmmaker and Affirmative Right contributor Richard Wolstencroft discusses Australian politics, social media censorship, and British and American politics on The Unshackled's current affairs show "Waves."

Irony is simple truth with nuance and complexity mixed in, and the great irony of Britain's EU membership was that, along with "straight bananas" and increasingly jackbooted Brussels-centered integration, the EU also introduced an element of much-needed democracy into British politics.

Imagine a movie that embodies everything hateful about Millennials, and you have Alien: Covenant. It takes an established series and tries to keep it alive with “big concept” buzzword-heavy screenwriting and a cast of people who embody the new America.

You've probably heard about the coming "5G Revolution" and maybe even possibly the ominously-named "Internet of Things" (IoT). The two go together and envision a world where every device—from your TV set and fridge down to light bulbs and sensors in your car—is wirelessly connected to the internet.

I am not a theologian by training, and only an amateur one by temperament. But it seems self-evident, even to a rank layman like me, that in our time the primary rhetorical strategy used by enemies of decency, civilization, and faith is to engage in a general and unabating mockery of any and all forms of chastity.

If you’re a leftist, you can get down on bended knee and worship the greatness of the Red Army and thank them for saving the world from the evils of Nazism (while delicately manoeuvring your considerable mental blind spot over the inconvenience of over two million rapes and the millions murdered by Stalin and his henchmen).

Nationalism and White European identitarianism have taken a lot of knocks in the Anglosphere in the last few years (Anglin's antics, Heilgate, Charlottesville, the TRS mess, the TWP mess, the National Action mess, mosque massacres, synagogue shootings, massive deplatforming and demonetizing, etc., etc.). This is mainly because the chosen medium—the internet, social media, and "the chans"—have favoured the most retarded and provocative. Now this is starting to change, and new space is opening up for a more moral and sensible nationalism. The latest episode of RamZPaul's Happy Homelands presents a good example of this with special guest Patrick Casey. Listen and learn.

Affirmative Right Chief Editor Colin Liddell discusses the Trump administration's recent warlike behaviour in the historical context of 1982. In that year the U.S. had an excellent opportunity to give direct military support to a very close ally whose territory had actually been invaded, but oddly chose not to, even when it would have saved hundreds of lives. How then can the U.S. justify sending troops and naval task forces to threaten countries like Venezuela and Iran which have invaded no one?

Let me introduce you to a new concept of mine: I call it the Standard White Person Position (SWPP). It is the psychological, ideological, and political position that any sane, sensible, reasonably intelligent White person should have, and it involves certain fair-minded views and perceptions of interest that objectively make sense.